FINRA'S
BLACK HOLE: In 30 Years, Only 17 Women Won Sexual Harassment Claims Before
Wall Street's Oversight Body(The
Intercept, by Susan Antilla) O'Brien's
case is one of 98 sexual harassment or hostile work environment claims and
counterclaims made by women that The Intercept and the Investigative Fund found
in the FINRA database over the past 30 years. FINRA does not categorize the
cases in its database, so to assemble our list, we searched for words and
phrases including "sexual harassment," "hostile environment," "sex," "sexual,"
and "harass." Our analysis is based on FINRA arbitration awards, brokers'
regulatory records from FINRA and state securities regulators, and court
records. FINRA's database includes legacy cases from the authority's two
predecessor organizations - the NASD and the New York Stock Exchange - which we
refer to here as FINRA cases. On March 14, in response to a request for information
about sexual harassment on Wall Street, FINRA turned over a summary of
arbitrations from the years 2010 to 2018 to Sen. Elizabeth Warren and two other
Democratic senators.

Bureau of Consumer
Financial Protection Announces Settlement With Wells Fargo For Auto-Loan
Administration and Mortgage Practices
(BCFP Press Release) In conjunction with the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection announced a settlement
with Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., in which the bank was found to have violated the
Consumer Financial Protection Act in administering a mandatory insurance
program related to its auto loans, and in its charging certain borrowers for
mortgage interest rate-lock extensions. The Bureau assessed a $1 billion
penalty against the bank and credited the $500 million penalty collected by the
OCC toward the satisfaction of its fine. READ the FULL TEXT BCFP CONSENT
ORDERand the OCC CONSENT ORDER

Cyber Criminal Sentenced to 36 Months in Prison for
Attempting to Steal More Than $3 Million From a Financial Institution and
Government Agencies / Defendant Conducted Unauthorized Intrusion into a
Government Website, and Attempted to Defraud the U.S. Department of Defense and
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation(DOJ Press Release) Federal prosecutors
alleged that between July 2015 and December 2015, Dwayne C. Hans submitted bids
to the Defense Logistics Agency ("DLA") for contracts in the names of
two different companies he created, and he was awarded 52 contracts worth about
$533,000 on which he was paid about $12,000. In early 2016, Hans created
numerous bank accounts in the name of a U.S. financial institution and he then
modified payment information for that institution in order to redirect about
$1.52 million payments a U.S. government agency intended to transfer to that
institution, but his actions were detected before he could withdraw/transfer
said funds. Hans also caused the electronic transfer of about $134,000 from two
corporate bank accounts at the institution and used the proceeds to purchase
stock, invest in real estate, and pay utility bills. Finally, Hans fraudulently
attempted to secure $1.6 million from the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation in
the form of bogus expenses for three pension plans that did not exist and had
no such reimbursable expenses. Hans pled guilty in the United States District
Court for the Eastern District of New York to one count each of wire fraud and
computer intrusion and was sentenced to 36 months' imprisonment and
ordered to pay $134,000.00 in restitution.

Pyrrhus, Battle Of Asculum, A Stockbroker, FINRA,
And A Pyrrhic Expungement Victory (BrokeAndBroker.com
Blog) Not being particularly fond of the times that I live in, I am a student
of Ancient Greek and Ancient Roman history. In presenting today's
BrokeAndBroker.com Blog's coverage of a FINRA expungement arbitration, I am reminded
of the Battle of Asculum, during which Pyrrhus of Greece defeated the Roman
army. As far as defeats go, this was a lopsided on in which Pyrrhus sustained
about half the losses of his enemy; however, his losses were still substantial
and many of his field commanders were killed. As is famously ascribed to
Pyrrhus ""If we are victorious in one more battle with the Romans, we
shall be utterly ruined."

Fast forward about 2,300 or so years and we
leave the bloody field of Asculum and arrive at the more sedate setting of a
FINRA arbitration hearing room. After the stockbroker Claimant and two of his
former firms do battle, the Claimant emerges with a victory that is Pyrrhic in
nature. He won the recommended expungment of a customer complaint. Unfortunately,
he lost the sought expungement of a second customer complaint and that lack of
redress may not be permanently etched into his industry record -- what was once
written in pencil now takes on the appearance of being carved in stone.

SEC Charges Businessman with Stealing Millions from
a Pension Plan (SEC Litigation Release No.
24116) The SEC filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the
Western District of Tennessee charging John S Jumper with stealing millions of
dollars from Snow Shoe Refractories, LLC's pension plan through the use of
forged documents, including fake Board of Directors resolutions. Jumper
diverted the allegedly stolen funds, in part, to repay personal debts and, to
invest in another business that paid a significant fee to a broker-dealer that
Jumper co-owned. Relief Defendants Alluvion Securities, LLC, American
Investments Fund II, LLC, Speedee Brakes, LLC, Thousand Hills Capital, LLC and
Evertone Records, LLC were named for the purpose of recovering stolen pension
funds allegedly in their possession. Criminal charges were filed in the United
States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania in a parallel
proceeding. READ THE FULL TEXT SEC
Complaint,

Chicago
Investment Advisor Sentenced to More Than 12 Years in Federal Prison for
Misappropriating $5.2 Million in Client Funds (DOJ
Press Release) Investment advisor Daniel Glick owned and operated Financial
Management Strategies Inc., Glick Accounting Services Inc., and Glick &
Associates Ltd., through which he purportedly provided accounting, tax,
investment, and financial services. From 2011 to 2017, federal prosecutors
alleged that Glick furnished forged checks and other phony documents to
financial institutions, lied to clients about the use and safety of their
investments, and misappropriated client funds to pay hundreds of thousands of
dollars to two business associates, and to make Ponzi-type payments to clients.
Glick purportedly stole over $5 million largely from elderly clients and used
some of the stolen funds to pay personal and business expenses, including the
purchase of a Mercedes-Benz automobile and payment of his mortgage. After
pleading guilty to one count of wire fraud, Glick was sentenced to 151 months
in prison and ordered to pay $5.2 million in restitution.

Former Equipment Rental Company Executive Sentenced
to Two Years Imprisonment for Failing to Pay Millions in Disgorgement to SEC (SEC
Litigation Release No. 24115 ) In Securities and Exchange Commission v.
John N. Milne, (08-CV-505, United States District Court for the District of
Connecticut), in 2008, the SEC charged John N. Milne, former Chairman of United
Rentals, Inc ("URI")., and others with fraud for engaging in a series
of fraudulent transactions designed to meet URI's forecasts and analyst
expectations. Milne was also indicted in a parallel federal criminal action.
Pursuant to a guilty plea and settlement, a judgment was entered against Milne
in the SEC's action ordering him, in part, to pay $6.25 million disgorgement
and interest, on which he paid $1 million to the SEC. In his criminal case, the
Court ordered him to pay the remaining $5.25 million to the SEC as a condition
of his supervised release. In 2018, the Court found that Milne had the
ability to pay more than the $500,000 that he had to date, as evidenced by his
expenditures on luxury services, personal items, and travel. Despite being
given the opportunity to make further payments, Milne failed and was sentenced
to two years imprisonment for violating the conditions of his supervised
release by failing to pay court-ordered disgorgement in a civil action brought
by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Of Bullet Fees And In House Counsel Fees In FINRA
Employment Arbitration(BrokeAndBroker.com Blog) I'm
not sure whether it's fact or fiction, but I've heard that in Iran and China
there's a "bullet fee," which is a bill sent by the government to the
families of executed prisoners. Be that as it may, there is a practice among some
employers to try and charge former employees for advice and counsel rendered
during so-called exit interviews, particularly when a lawyer from the General
Counsel's office is sitting in on the proceedings and urges you to pay a
past-due bill or reimburse the firm for a disputed charge. Sometimes that
in-house lawyer's advice is presented with the intent to smooth things along
and avoid litigation -- you may even appreciate the counsel. Other times, the
advice is a not-so-subtle threat tantamount to we can do it the easy way or we
can do it the hard way. In a recent FINRA arbitration pitting a former employer
against a former employee, we are presented with an interesting issue about the
employer Claimant's effort to obtain reimbursement, in part, for advice
provided by its in-house counsel to an employee who eventually became the
Respondent.

Former Chief Financial Officer Pleads Guilty In
Manhattan Federal Court To Defrauding Former Employer Of Over $2 Million (DOJ
Press Release) Randy Wang pled guilty to an Information in the United States
District Court for the Southern District of New York charging him with one
count of wire fraud in connection with defrauding his former employer, a
company that manages a global airline alliance comprising about 13
international airlines and their affiliates. Wang pled guilty to incurring
over $2.2 million in unauthorized charges unrelated to his job on the
company's credit card account. Among the alleged charges were 443 laptop
computers, 241 mobile electronic devices, 24 tablet computers, and numerous
other electronics. READ the FULL TEXT INDICTMENT.

Essex County, New Jersey, Man Admits Bribing Letter
Carriers To Deliver Parcels Containing Marijuana (DOJ
Press Release) I mean, c'mon, how could you not want to read about this case
with a headline like that? Glenn Blackstone pled guilty to an
Information in the United States District Court for the District of New Jerseky
to one count of giving bribes and one count of conspiracy to distribute
marijuana. Blackstoner admitted to conspiring to obtain marijuana from
California to sell in New Jersey, and paying cash bribes to two U.S. Postal
Service mail carriers to intercept and deliver parcels to him, These parcels
had fictitious names and addresses on them and were not addressed directly to
Blackstone. READ the FULL TEXT
INDICTMENT.

Defendant Indicted for Swindling Investors in Binary
Options and Crytocurrency Scheme / Defendant Allegedly Lied to the FBI and
Altered Documents to Obstruct Investigation (DOJ
Press Release) Blake Kantor a/k/a "Bill Gordon" was indicted in the United
States District Court for the Eastern District of New York on conspiracy to
commit wire fraud, obstruction of an official proceeding, and making false
statements to Special Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Federal prosecutors alleged that in March
2014, Kantor established Blue Bit Banc or Blue Bit Analytics, Ltd. ("BBB"), a
company that purportedly sold binary options. From approximately 2014 to 2017,
Kantor and others allegedly solicited from 713 investors about $2.1 million but
did not disclose to those investors that BBB computer software allowed the
company to fraudulently alter data so that the probability of investors earning
a profit favored BBB. Further, Kantor allegedly converted investors'
funds into ATM Coin, a purportedly worthless cryptocurrency.

My Way Rules In Pro Se Expungement Case Against J.P.
Morgan(BrokeAndBroker.com
Blog)
Today's BrokeAndBroker.com Blog considers the lawsuit of a registered rep who
handled his own expungement arbitration against his former employer J.P. Morgan
Securities. Sometimes these pro se cases go well. Sometimes they just go off
the rails. Regardless of the outcome, the self-represented party often takes
some satisfaction in knowing that he did it "My Way." He may not have
won his case but he did get to end his lawsuit humming one helluva pop tune.

SEC Obtains Final Judgment Against Investor
Relations Writer Charged with Fraudulent Stock Promotion Scheme(SEC Litigation
Release No. 24113) The United States District Court for the Western District of
Washington entered a final judgment against Vincent Cassano for his role in a
fraudulent stock promotion scheme. The SEC had alleged that Lidingo Holdings,
LLC hired writers like Cassano to publish bullish articles on its clients that
appeared to be independent research but were, in fact, paid advertisements. The
SEC's litigation continues against Lidingo Holdings, Kamilla Bjorlin, Andrew
Hodge and Brian Nichols.

SEC Charges Virginia Investment Adviser with Fraud (SEC Litigation
Release No. 24114)
In a Complaint filed in the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of Virginia, the SEC alleged that from at least
February 2015, Amrit J. S. Chahal used his company, Kane Capital Investment
Group, LLC, to fraudulently solicit approximately $1.4 million from about 50
individuals by falsely claiming to be an experienced and successful trader who
could generate above-market returns through a low-risk trading strategy. The
Complaint alleges that contrary to his representatings, Chahal had
substantially no financial/securities industry experience or trading securities
on behalf of clients. After sustaining purporedly substantial losses, Chahal
allegedly lied to his clients about their investments,and diverted funds for
such personal use as to pay for his luxury car, rent, travel, dining, and other
living expenses, and to make Ponzi-like payments to earlier investors. READ the FULL TEXT Complaint.

In anticipation of the institution of
proceedings by the SEC but without admitting or denying the findings, Arlington
Capital management, Inc. and Joseph F. LoPresit submitted an Offer of
Settlement, which the federal regulator accepted. In the Matter of Arlington Capital
management, Inc. and Joseph F. LoPresti, Respondents (Order
Instituting Administrative And Cease-And-Desist Proceedings, Making Findings,
And Imposing Remedial Sanctions And A Cease-And-Desist Order; Invest. Adv.
Act Rel. No. 4885; Admin. Proc. File No. 3-18437 / April 16, 2018) (the
"OIP"). The SEC alleged, in part, that from at least 2012 to 2015,
Arlington, a registered investment adviser, had issued misleading
advertisements about its investment performance in written communications to
clients and prospective clients and in weekly radio broadcasts and video
webcasts by Joseph F. LoPresti, Arlington's President, 80 percent owner, and
Chief Compliance Officer. In accordance with the terms of the settlement, the
SEC Censured Respondents Arlington and LoPresti and ordered them to cease and
desist from committing or causing any violations and any future violations of
the Advisers Act and Rules thereunder. Respondent Arlington was ordered to pay
a $125,000.00 civil penalty and Respondent LoPresti to pay a $75,000.00 civil
penalty.

For the purpose of proposing a settlement of
rule violations alleged by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
("FINRA"), without admitting or denying the findings, prior to a
regulatory hearing, and without an adjudication of any issue, Instinet, LLC,
submitted a Letter of Acceptance, Waiver and Consent ("AWC"), which
FINRA accepted. In the Matter of Instinet, LLC, Respondent, (FINRA
AWC 2013036836015, April 12, 2018) The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority,
BOX Options Exchange LLC; the CBOE BZX Exchange, Inc.; Investors Exchange LLC;
the NASDAQ Stock Market LLC; and the New York Stock Exchange; and certain of
their affiliated Exchanges censured and imposed a $1.575 million fine
on Instinet, LLC for violations of various provisions of Rule 15c3-5 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (known as the Market Access Rule) and
related exchange supervisory rules. As set forth in part in the FINRA AWC:

Instinet
provided market access to numerous clients. FINRA and the Exchanges found that
the Firm failed to supervise trading to detect and prevent potentially
violative and manipulative activity. Further, FINRA and the Exchanges found
that the firm failed to comply with the Market Access Rule by failing to
implement financial and regulatory risk management controls and procedures
reasonably designed to prevent the entry of erroneous or duplicative orders,
orders that exceeded appropriate pre-set credit or capital thresholds, or
erroneous messaging activity resulting from malfunctioning customer algorithms
and trading systems.

Former Long Island Investment Adviser Sentenced to
57 Months in Prison for Stealing $3 Million from Investors(DOJ Press
Release) Federal prosecutors alleged that between approximately January
2016 and February 2017, former investment adviser/hedge fund manager Eric Erb
fraudulently solicited about $5.4 million from investors, who believed that he
would follow their investment instructions. Although Erb persuaded the
investors that they were earning profits, in fact, they were suffering losses
and their investments had been diverted by Erb for such personal purposes as
home renovations, country club dues and private school tuition. Erb pled
guilty in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York
to wire fraud. He was sentenced to 57 months in prison plus three years
supervised release, and ordered to pay $5.3 million in restitution and a $5.3
million forfeiture judgment and a $215,000 forfeiture of the proceeds from the
sale of his former residence.

Rashomon Plays Out In Merrill Lynch Discretionary
Case
(BrokeAndBroker.com Blog) A recent FINRA regulatory settlement presents us with
the puzzling scenario of three versions of the same event as told by the
stockbroker, his employer, and the industry regulator. There seems little doubt
that according to the letter of the rulebook, the stockbroker entered
unauthorized trades. The more interesting question is why and whether there
were circumstances that might excuse or explain the questioned use of
discretion. All of which reminds me of the famed film Rashomon and
its characters the bandit, the samurai, and the samurai's wife. In the end,
wrong was committed but as to who did what and why -- ahhhh, that's the
movie.

Long Island Investment Portfolio Manager Sentenced
to 28 Months in Prison for Scheme to Steal More Than $440,000 from Clients
/ Defendant Created Sham Investment Advising Business(DOJ Press
Release) Federal prosecutors alleged from about July 2014 to October
2015, Patrick Morgan Schiro fraudulently induced five
individuals to invest $440,000 with his alleged investment management
business Black Rock Morgan LCC ("BRM") by falsely stating, for
example, that BRM had many clients, managed millions of dollars in assets, and
had "a team of investment professionals with significant sector-specific
expertise." Schiro purportedly diverted the bulk of the investments to such
personal use as his children's university tuition and then concocted excuses as
to why he could not redeem investments. Moreover, Schiro allegedly concealed his
prior federal conviction for securities fraud from at least four of the five
investors. Schiro pled guilty in the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of New York to wire fraud and was
sentenced to 28 months in prison with restitution to be
determined. $440,000.

SEC Charges CEO in Penny Stock Fraud Scheme (SEC Litigation
Release No. 24111) The SEC filed a
Complaint in the United States District Court for the Northern District of
Illinois against Andrew J. Kandalepas, the CEO of an alleged penny-stock
company the Wellness Center USA, Inc. ("Wellness") for
allegedly making false and misleading statements in the company's SEC
filings and press releases and with manipulating the company's stock. Securities
and Exchange Commission v. Andrew J. Kandelapas, (18-cv-02637, NDIL)The
Complaint alleges that Kandalepas took $450,000 in unauthorized withdrawals
from the company and then concealed his actions by causing Wellness to
characterize his withdrawals as salary, prepayments, or loans in false and
misleading Forms 10-K and 10-Q. Further, Kandalepas was charged with
manipulating the market for Wellness stock and causing Wellness to issue false
and misleading press releases touting non-existent sales of medical devices by
a subsidiary. Separately, the SEC made findings with respect to the
involvement of settling Respondents Wellness, its auditor Li and Company, P.C.
(Li & Co.), audit engagement partner Tony Li, and Matthew T. Mushlin,
who Kandalepas hired as an unregistered broker to solicit investments in
Wellness through private placement agreements. Without admitting or denying the
SEC's findings. Wellness agreed to a cease-and desist order. Mushlin agreed to
a cease-and-desist order, to pay disgorgement of $232,925 with $23,101 of
prejudgment interest, and a $240,000 civil penalty, and bars and prohibitions
from association. Li & Co. and Li agreed to a cease-and-desist order, to
each pay $22,500 in disgorgement with $2,643 of prejudgment interest, and to
pay, jointly and severally, a $45,000 civil penalty, and to be permanently
suspended from appearing or practicing before the Commission as an accountant,
which includes not participating in the financial reporting or audits of public
companies.

South Florida Certified Public Accountant Indicted
for Tax Fraud(DOJ
Press Release) Certified public accountant Darryl Sharpton, the owner of the
public accounting firm The Sharpton Group, was indicted in the United States
District Court of the Southern District of Florida with tax evasion, failing to
file tax returns, and failing to pay over payroll taxes to the Internal Revenue
Service. The Sharpton Group allegedly specialized in financial and
management consulting, audit and attestation, and tax and wealth planning.
Allegedly, Sharpton filed personal income tax returns for the years 2004
through 2008 and 2010, but failed to pay the reported taxes' and, further, he
failed to file personal income tax returns for years 2011 through 2016 despite
his obligation to do so. After the IRS audited him and issued levies/liens,
Sharpton then purportedly removed himself from his company's payroll, paid
his personal expenses through the corporate bank accounts, lied to an IRS
collections official, and failed to timely pay over to the IRS payroll
taxes that he withheld from the paychecks of The Sharpton Group's
employees.

Tag Cloud

BILL SINGER is a lawyer who represents securities-industry firms, individual registered persons, Wall Street whistleblowers, and defrauded public investors. For over three decades, Singer has represented clients before the American Stock Exchange, the New York Stock Exchange, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (formerly the NASD), the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, and in criminal investigations brought by various federal, state, and local prosecutors. He has the distinction of representing witnesses during Congressional investigations. In 2015, Singer achieved a significant award in excess of $1 million from the Securities and Exchange Commission on behalf of a whistleblower client.

Singer is presently Of Counsel to a law firm and the publisher of the BrokeAndBroker.com Blog, which was rated as one of the industry's top eight destination websites and the leading legal/regulatory blog by "Investment News."

Before entering the private practice of law, Singer was employed in the Legal Department of Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co.; as a regulatory attorney with both the American Stock Exchange and the NASD (now FINRA); and as a Legal Counsel to Integrated Resources Asset Management. Singer was formerly Chief Counsel to the Financial Industry Association; General Counsel to the NASD Dissidents' Grassroots Movement; and General Counsel to the Independent Broker-Dealer Association. He was registered for a number of years as a Series 7 and Series 63 stockbroker.

Singer regularly appears as a commentator on television and radio, and is frequently quoted in the press. He is an outspoken critic of ineffective regulation and an advocate for economic and political sanity.